Introduction

PHC is an acpi-cpufreq patch built with the purpose of enabling undervolting on your processor. This can potentially divide the power consumption of your processor by two or more, and in turn increase battery life and reduce fan noise noticiably. PHC works only if your processor's architecture supports undervolting.

For a complete power management suite see Related articles in top-right of the page.

Alternative to PHC

cpupowerdAUR is a userland solution to replace the in-kernel cpufreq governors and also enable undervolting, only on AMD processors. Like PHC, it requires the user to find safe voltages by himself.

Supported CPUs

PHC supports the following processor families:

Intel

Mobile Centrino

Atom (N2xx)

Core / Core2 (T and P Series)

Core i (tested on Core i3 550)

Note: Frequency locking does not seem to be working on Core i3 with the current stable 0.3.2 release of PHC, so finding the best vids for all but the highest frequency might be difficult or impossible.

AMD

K8 series

Installing the necessary packages

Install from the AUR either phc-intelAUR if you have an Intel processor, or phc-k8AUR if you have an AMD-K8-series one.

Next you need to compile the module for your kernel; this will also be necessary after a kernel update.

If the acpi-cpufreq module is not already being loaded at boot, create the appropriate file in /etc/modules-load.d/. See this wiki article for more information.

Note: In the case of phc-intelAUR, the acpi-cpufreq module is automatically loaded by /usr/lib/modprobe.d/phc-intel.conf.

Configuring PHC

Finding safe low voltages

To automatically find the best voltages, you can use the mprime-phc-setup script. Just copy the code into a text file, chmod +x it to make it executable and run it. You need to install mprimeAUR first (it is used to check that the CPU is stable). This script has not been tested on many systems yet, but should be safe.

You can also try linux-phc-optimizeAUR, although it has produced unsafe vids on some setups. The script progressively lowers the values until the system crashes, and adds two to the values for stability. Because the system will crash, do not do anything else during the tests. Run it once for each value, then check /usr/share/linux-phc-optimize/phc_tweaked_vids.

Editing the configuration

After the phc module is compiled and the lowest voltages are found, they need to be added to the configuration file at /etc/conf.d/phc-intel or /etc/conf.d/phc-k8.

For example:

VIDS="25 22 15 8 5"

Then just restart the phc daemon:

# rc.d start phc-intel

or

# rc.d start phc-k8

Troubleshooting

Module loading

Run:

$ dmesg | grep acpi-cpufreq

If you see errors regarding this module, something has gone wrong OR you cannot use PHC.

Hardware recognition

There should be some files in /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/ beginning with "phc_".
To check whether PHC is working or not, just type:

$ cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/phc_controls

you should read some values. If the values do not appear, then PHC is probably not supported by your CPU.

Voltage controlling

You can easily check whether PHC is working or not by looking at the cpu voltages: if the voltages are lower than the normal ones, then PHC has done its job. You can also manually set voltages, for example: